Howard was selected as Liberal candidate for the
Eskdale division of
Cumberland at the
1906 General Election. As part of the Liberal landslide victory he gained the seat for the party, ousting the sitting Conservative
Claude Lowther with a swing of 6%. In 1909, he was appointed private secretary to the
Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade,
Harold Tennant. The Liberal Party lost ground at the
January 1910 general election, but Howard held his seat, and was appointed private secretary to the
Prime Minister H. H. Asquith.
Another General Election followed 11 months later but this time Howard lost his Eskdale seat to Claude Lowther. In 1911, Asquith appointed him
Vice-Chamberlain of the Household, a post he held until 1915. He then served as a
Junior Lord of the Treasury from 1915 to 1916. At the
1922 general election, he sought a return to Parliament in his old stomping ground of Cumberland when he contested the unionist-held
North Cumberland. However, he lost narrowly, by a margin of 1.6%. The next year, at the
1923 general election, Howard fought the
Luton division of Bedfordshire. The Liberals were experiencing something of a revival nationally, which helped him win the seat from the sitting Unionist
Sir John Prescott Hewett.
Another general election followed a year later in 1924, and with the Unionists in the ascendency, he lost his seat. This effectively ended Howard's parliamentary career as he did not contest another parliamentary seat. Apart from his political career Howard was also a
Justice of Peace and a
temporary lieutenant in the
Royal Naval Division in 1914. which he remained until his death four years later. ==Marriage and issue==